Unfortunately, there isn't a an overload of Sum
that accepts an IEnumerable<TimeSpan>
. Additionally, there's no current way of specifying operator-based generic constraints for type-parameters, so even though TimeSpan
is "natively" summable, that fact can't be picked up easily by generic code.
One option would be to, as you say, sum up an integral-type equivalent to the timespan instead, and then turn that sum into a TimeSpan
again. The ideal property for this is TimeSpan.Ticks
, which round-trips accurately. But it's not necessary to change the property-type on your class at all; you can just project:
var totalSpan = new TimeSpan(myCollection.Sum(r => r.TheDuration.Ticks));
Alternatively, if you want to stick to the TimeSpan's +
operator to do the summing, you can use the Aggregate
operator:
var totalSpan = myCollection.Aggregate
(TimeSpan.Zero,
(sumSoFar, nextMyObject) => sumSoFar + nextMyObject.TheDuration);
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…